Win-Win
When my Roland SP540 was delivered to Texas from Roland in Calif., it came in a big cardboard box with Styrofoam blocks and smaller card board boxes inside, all was strapped down on a wood pallet, so I guess yours will be the same, since the guy still has the original shipping box. The shipping was only $300 from Calif. to Texas by a freight company called Conway, they even had a lift gate on the rear of the trailer because I didn't have a shipping dock, the driver used the lift gate to lower the printer to the ground.
However, when I purchased my used Seal 54 laminator from a guy in New Jersey, the best price I could get was $860 from a shipper on the east coast (Teamsters?), so me and the wife decide to take a mini vacation and drove to NJ with a 10' utility trailer. We drove the 1,600 miles in three days stopping in Nashville to see the Grand Old Opry and other tourist spots along the way.
After meeting the seller and getting a first hand demo and instructions on the laminator, they help us load it onto the trailer, covered it with a tarp and strapped it down with tie-down straps. If I was picking up a printer, I would have rented a closed-in U-haul trailer in NJ for the one way trip back to TX.
We had a few extra days there which we spent in New York seeing the sights, Empire State building, statue of Liberty, etc., then drove back to TX.
Staying at Motel-6's and driving to NJ and back to Texas in 8 days, spending about $800 for the trip (Fuel, eats, lodging, etc), which would have gone to the shipper, so instead we had what we called a mini-vacation.
Oh, didn't mention the trip was in November of 2008, and driving though Tenn and the smoky mountains was beautiful. We had never seen the changing leaves, it was a great trip all the way and what I like to think of as a win-win situation.
Bottom, line, I got to check out the used equipment in person, received a on-hands demo, I loaded and transported the laminator and didn't run a forklift into it, and had a nice little vacation with the money that would have gone to a shipping company (who handle the stuff like gorillas).